This is an astonishing chart, just released today, April 1, 2014. Can't get any fresher than that.
The "Get a Life Institute" of Cambridge, Massachusetts has just conducted a one-year, longitudinal study of how much people need to get a life. I've used a top flight data analysis, tool, Excel, to crunch the data and magically break it into age groups.
13,013 people were asked about their friends and work colleagues: Whether they ever talked about their SAT or ACT scores, their age, and how much the respondent thought that person should "Get a Life." (That's what the Get a Life Foundation does, duh.)
I think the results speak for themselves. I have independently verified this data by speaking to a couple guys at Buffalo Wild Wings. Statistically sound.
The "Get a Life Institute" of Cambridge, Massachusetts has just conducted a one-year, longitudinal study of how much people need to get a life. I've used a top flight data analysis, tool, Excel, to crunch the data and magically break it into age groups.
13,013 people were asked about their friends and work colleagues: Whether they ever talked about their SAT or ACT scores, their age, and how much the respondent thought that person should "Get a Life." (That's what the Get a Life Foundation does, duh.)
I think the results speak for themselves. I have independently verified this data by speaking to a couple guys at Buffalo Wild Wings. Statistically sound.
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